Hi guys curious if in the past with reddit did you use push notifications (via first party app, 3rd party apps, or desktop).

Do you wish it could be expanded to Lemmy?

Or do you think push is to addicting/bad?

Curious on your thoughts

  • mobyduck648@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Personally I wish they’d never been invented, I don’t let any apps send me notifications other than chat apps and even then with no sound and all group chats are muted permanently. I can’t stand the constant ping of apps trying to get you to engage with them, I want to engage on my schedule not anyone else’s especially some Silicon Valley product manager’s. Even in this much quieter state not having my phone feels exactly like not having my baccy felt when I used to smoke, until I got into the Fediverse I was tempted to pull the plaster off entirely and throw it in the sea.

    I’m also a bitter and cynical software engineer who should under no circumstances be consulted for UX advice, so it’s probably wise for Lemmy to implement them.

  • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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    1 year ago

    I would like to have push and know we will in future. I used redreader which would pull for replies once an hour and notify me if anything was new. Though that is less “push” notifications and more “pull” notifications

  • PotentiallyAnApricot@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I tend to turn off push notifications for most things that aren’t my own calendar/routine reminders. I find them really overwhelming. No shame to people who like them, but my brain and my body just don’t like being alerted all the time, it makes it harder for me to focus on my own needs.

    I do support push capability for people who want them, though- I am sure that forgetfulness for some people is as frustrating as overwhelm is for me. As long as they can be turned off!

  • CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    I used Joey and it did have push notifications. I turned off all notifications, though. It got really distracting. I prefer no notifications on lemmy, but I know other people want it and that’s fine.

  • SomeGuyNamedPaul@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I find them useful so I can see when someone replies to me. It’s a thing that apps have, I kinda expect Lemmy apps to have it.

  • russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net
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    1 year ago

    I think it would be nice for the people who want the option.

    However, Lemmy and other “message board” types of applications/services don’t really register to me as something that needs immediate acting upon. If someone replies to a comment of mine, I don’t think (or hope, at least) they would expect me to reply back in say five minutes. I do get an email notification, which my email app is set to check for new emails every 45 minutes.

    The exception I could see to this is for moderation actions - if someone reports a comment/post for example, or someone signs up for my instance (though I could see that being a bit annoying on larger instances where someone could be signing up say every 5 minutes), that would be nice to get instantly.

    That is something that I really like Android’s “Notification Channels” for. If an app implements it properly, you’d be able to receive push notifications for just moderation actions, and leave it turned off for comment replies.

    I (personally) do not find push notifications to be addicting so-to-speak, but I do use a wearable so that the things I do find important to have push notifications on for (such as messages from family) I can see/“feel” those come in instantly.

  • Jamie@jamie.moe
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    1 year ago

    When I used the official Reddit app before I saw the light of RIF, I had push notifications. I didn’t have them on RIF except when I opened it, and I found that to be a lot nicer on my psyche.

    I have email notifications enabled on Lemmy right now, which turns into a push. But I don’t really mind as much because the conversations here are nicer, and it’s usually replies to me trying to be helpful, which are nice to see.

    • Deemo@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      One thing I like about lemmy (at least for now) is since communities are a lot smaller than reddit their is a limit of new content that can be generted per day (if you sub to 20 or less comunities).

      This kinda helps avoid the reddit doom scrooling (I’m guilty of this especially during the blackouts and spez issues).

  • acow@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I did use push notifications with Apollo. They’re useful if you want to engage with people responding to something you posted.